The flintlock pistol from Predator 2 appears — given to a trapper ancestor of the one who’d later give it to Harrigan. It’s a respectful nod, not a Marvel-style “hey remember this?” moment. Naru returns to her tribe wearing the Predator’s head as a trophy. No fanfare. No celebration. Just exhausted, bloody acknowledgment.
The Predator’s tech advantage is usually framed as “modern military vs. alien.” Here, the Predator has infrared vision, a cloaking device, a laser-guided projectile, and retractable blades. What does Naru have? A tomahawk, a dog, tethered rope, and knowledge of her own land . Prey 2022
Here’s the deep dive. 1719 Northern Great Plains. No electricity. No guns (for the Comanche). No comms. No rescue. The flintlock pistol from Predator 2 appears —
The film’s quietest thematic beat: The Predator kills the French easily. Naru kills the Predator. The hierarchy of hunters isn’t about technology — it’s about respect for the land and the kill. In an era of overblown scores and shaky-cam chaos, Prey breathes. Long shots of the prairie. Wide frames where the cloaked Predator is barely a shimmer. The sound design: wind, footsteps, a dog’s growl, the click of the Predator’s wrist blades. No fanfare
Prey works because it’s a survival film first, a period piece second, and a Predator movie third. The alien is the catalyst, not the point. The point is a young woman forcing the world to recognize her — and proving that the deadliest weapon isn’t plasma or steel. It’s patience. And dirt. And a dog who loves you.
The “Feral” Predator is leaner , more animalistic, less ceremonial. Its mask has a skull motif. Its weapons are brutal and direct. Its cloaking flickers imperfectly. It kills a bear not for food — but to assert dominance over Earth’s apex predator.